6533b85bfe1ef96bd12babac
RESEARCH PRODUCT
The Moral Foundations of Left-Wing Authoritarianism: On the Character, Cohesion, and Clout of Tribal Equalitarian Discourse
Justin E. LaneKevin MccaffreeF. Leron Shultssubject
Social and Information Networks (cs.SI)FOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer Science - Computers and SocietyComputer Science - Computation and LanguageComputers and Society (cs.CY)Computer Science - Social and Information NetworksComputation and Language (cs.CL)description
Left-wing authoritarianism remains far less understood than right-wing authoritarianism. We contribute to the literature on the former, which typically relies on surveys, using a new social media analytics approach. We use a list of 60 terms to provide an exploratory sketch of the outlines of a political ideology (tribal equalitarianism) with origins in 19th and 20th century social philosophy. We then use analyses of the English Corpus of Google Books (over 8 million books) and scraped unique tweets from Twitter (n = 202,852) to conduct a series of investigations to discern the extent to which this ideology is cohesive amongst the public, reveals signatures of authoritarianism and has been growing in popularity. Though exploratory, our results provide some evidence of left-wing authoritarianism in two forms (1) a uniquely conservative moral signature amongst ostensible liberals using measures from Moral Foundations Theory and (2) a substantial prevalence of anger, relative to anxiety or sadness. In general, results indicate that this worldview is growing in popularity, is increasingly cohesive, and shows signatures of authoritarianism.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2021-02-22 |